NEW DELHI, Aug 9 (Agencies): Nearly two years before former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's assassination, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) called her son Rajiv Gandhi was 'politically immature' and suggested that he may not succeed her in the event of sudden death. The agency further said Rajiv 'failed to excite either the party or the public', reported the Press Trust of India quoting a secret report declassified by the US agency.

In the report dated January 14, 1983, the CIA noted that the Congress Party would become weaker in such circumstances.

However, post the then premier's assassination in October 1984, the sequence of events proved otherwise as she was succeeded by Rajiv, who within a few months was re-elected with an unprecedented mandate.

Similar to that of India's Right to Information Act, CIA released a sanitised copy of the report 'India in the Mid-1980s: Goals and Challenges' under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

Running into more than 30 pages, the document reportedly discussed the prospects of India in the mid-1980s and looked into various political scenarios, which among others included re- election of Indira Gandhi in the next general election in 1985 with a slim majority and what happens in the case of her sudden death.

"In the event of (Indira) Gandhi's sudden death, Raiiv Gandhi, working closely with President Zail Singh, would be one of the major figures involved in the selection of a successor. His own chances of being elevated to the office right now are uncertain, in part because of his political immaturity and because of his still junior status," the CIA had said in its secret report declassified in December.

"Raiiv's prospects would probably improve the longer Indira Gandhi remained in office. However, even if he were to become prime minister, his hold on the reins of power could be short lived unless he unexpectedly emerges as a superb political strategist like his mother or develops a party organisation," the report noted.

NEW DELHI, Aug 9 (Agencies): Amid the border standoff with China, Defence Minister Arun Jaitley today said the Indian armed forces are strong enough to meet any challenge to the country’s security as he underlined that lessons have been learnt from the 1962 war.
He also said in the Rajya Sabha that the people of the country have a predominant wish of retrieving the parts of Jammu and Kashmir occupied by Pakistan since 1948.
Jaitley, while initiating a special debate to mark the 75th anniversa